Month: June 2017

“I would like a game to be tied with 2 minutes left to play. Then I want either team to win the game – I really do not care which one – without the benefit of some outlandish call by an official.

“I am only asking for one game like that. After enduring the tedium of this NBA regular season and its playoffs, I don’t think that is so much to ask for.”

Well, I got my wish last night; it was a 5-point game with 3 minutes to go and a 1-point game with 1 minute to go and there were no outlandish calls in the final 3 minutes of the game. The Warriors scored the final 11 points in the game to take a 3-0 lead in the Finals. Here is some history:

Prior to this year, 12 teams have taken a 3-0 lead in the NBA Finals.

All 12 of them have become NBA Champions.

If you are to believe the narrative of many of the sports yikkers on TV, this series and this season represents LeBron James’ quest to be recognized as “The GOAT” in basketball. I have no idea if that is really in James’ mind – nor do I care because those sorts of arguments get very old very quickly. However, I would note that leading/carrying the first team ever to come back from a 3-0 deficit in the Finals would be a solid résumé entry.

I have not seen any reports on the TV ratings from last night’s game but the ratings for Games 1 and 2 were up about 8% from last year when these same two teams met in the Finals. My interpretation of that is that plenty of basketball fans knew in their hearts that this was going to be the pairing in the Finals and had been waiting all year to see it. Regular season ratings had been down but now the fans were going to get what they really wanted to see. Games 1 & 2 were hardly exciting; last night’s game was as entertaining as anyone could have wanted.

Also earlier this week, I said that there was a surprise eruption of news from the college basketball world when Ohio State fired Thad Matta as its head coach. Early June is normally a quiescent time in college basketball – just as it is in college football. And then, yesterday, news broke in the world of college football that was even more shocking than Ohio state’s announcement. Bob Stoops announced his retirement as the head coach of the Oklahoma Sooners football team.

At the news conference called to make this announcement, Stoops said specifically that “health” was not a factor in his decision. He made that point emphatically more than once. That is good to hear because I know of no reason to wish ill-health on Bob Stoops. Moreover, here is a bit of Stoops’ family history:

Bob Stoops’ father, Ron Stoops Sr., was a successful high school coach in Ohio. In 1988 at the age of 54, Ron Stoops Sr. was coaching in a game against an opponent coached by his son, Ron Jr.

In the second half of that game, Ron Stoops, Sr. collapsed on the sidelines and died of a heart attack soon after the game ended.

Bob Stoops is now 56 years old…

I am not insinuating in any way that Bob Stoops has a health problem; that would be an outrageous assertion. I do think, however, that his father’s sideline incident and Bob Stoops’ current age has to be something in the back of his mind. Bob Stoops has made plenty of money in his career at Oklahoma; he is leaving on his own terms; he could – if he wanted to – slip easily into a TV commentator role. He has earned his retirement years and has decided to start to “cash in on them” a bit earlier than most highly successful coaches do.

Here is what I mean by a “highly successful coach” as it applies to Bob Stoops’ career:

His record at OU is 190-48; the Sooners under Stoops were 101-9 in Norman, OK.

In 18 years, Stoops’ teams won 10 conference championships and 1 National Championship.

In 14 of his 18 seasons at Oklahoma, the team won 10 games or more.

Oklahoma named its offensive coordinator, Lincoln Riley, as the man to take over from Stoops; Riley is all of 33 years old. Following a legend in a job is not an easy task. Let me use Oklahoma football to demonstrate what I mean:

Bud Wilkinson coached the Sooners in the 50s and early 60s; his teams dominated the 50s and won national championships. When he retired, the next two coaches spent a total of 3 years on the sidelines and the total record over those 3 seasons was 15-15-1.

Barry Switzer coached the Sooners in the 70s and 80s also winning national championships and amassing a winning percentage of .844. From the time Switzer left and Bob Stoops took over, three coaches amassed a cumulative record of 61-50-2 – – not nearly a winning percentage of .844.

Bonne chance, Lincoln Riley …

It is almost obligatory at this point to pose the rhetorical question:

Will Bob Stoops ever return to coaching?

Here is my answer:

He left coaching on his own terms and so he could change his mind someday – also on his own terms – and return to the sidelines somewhere. Here is a major question he will need to resolve in his own mind.

Absent a financial necessity to go back and earn the kind of money a highly successful college football coach can command, would he want to spend a significant portion of every year cajoling 17-year old prima donnas to come to his school to play football as opposed to going to some other school to do the same thing. Or has he “been there … done that”?

Finally, with so much of today’s rant focused on matters in college football, this commentary from Brad Dickson seems an appropriate way to close things out:

“Next year’s College Football Playoff national championship game will have a ‘Super Bowl-style halftime show.’ Step one: Hire a musician whose last hit song was in 1968.

“ESPN and the College Football Playoff committee are going to work on the halftime show together. What could possibly go wrong here?”

I do not play fantasy sports but I have a hunch that, if you had Scooter Gennett in your baseball lineup yesterday, you did pretty well. Gennett tied an MLB record with 4 home runs in a single game becoming only the 17th player in baseball history to do that. He also had a single to produce a stat line for the evening like this:

5 for 5; 4 runs scored; 10 RBIs; 17 total bases

At the start of the game, Gennett had hit a total of 38 home runs in his career which began in 2013 and consisted of 502 games and 1637 at bats. It is fair to say that he had a “career-game” last night.

The Seattle Seahawks put an end to the speculation that they would sign Colin Kaepernick as their backup QB earlier this week by signing Austin Davis to fill that role. I wrote previously that I thought Seattle would be a logical landing spot for Kaepernick for the simple reason that the team had no viable backup on the roster but the rest of the roster indicated that the playoffs should be within reach. Signing Austin Davis simply adds fuel to the concocted debate that has been out there ever since the Niners released Kaepernick regarding the motive(s) for his long-standing free agency.

Austin Davis was drafted by the Rams out of Southern Mississippi in the 2012 NFL Draft. He did not see the field in his rookie; he did not see the field in 2013 and in the previous 2 seasons, he has appeared in 13 games – starting 10 of them. He was with the Rams in 2014 and the Browns in 2015. When Austin Davis is the starter, his team’s record is 3-7-0. For his career, he has thrown 13 TDs and 12 INTs and he has completed 62.4% of his passes.

Meaning absolutely no disrespect to Austin Davis, those statistical entries on his résumé do not match those of Colin Kaepernick who did take a team to the Super Bowl. Meaning absolutely no disrespect to Colin Kaepernick, that was at the end of the 2012 NFL season and a lot of water has gone over the dam since then.

I do not know why the Seahawks made the decision that they did; they worked out and interviewed both men; the folks who run the Seahawks are not stumblebums. Rather than add to the cacophony surrounding this “debate”, I will simply say this:

When a player’s perceived talent level is sufficient, that perception is sufficient to override some dark stains on that player’s reputation – darker than Colin Kaepernick’s national anthem protest last year.

Let me stay with NFL news for a moment here … If you have watched NFL games on TV for even a few moments, you realize that beer companies spend a lot of money buying advertising time on those games. However, there have never been any ads there for hard liquor and the reason for that is that the NFL has “worked with its broadcast partners” to refrain from selling ad slots for those sorts of products. That will change this season.

The NFL has eased up a bit here and will allow the networks to sell up to 4 ad slots (30 seconds each) to hard liquor products per game. This is not a capitulation by the NFL to economic realities because there are still restrictions:

None of the ads can be “football focused”. You are not going to see folks in their backyard pounding shots and playing touch football; you are not going to see a football team in the locker room after a game drinking highballs; you are not going to see an active player endorsing “hooch”.

Each ad must contain some sort of exhortation to use the product responsibly and not to do something dumb like drink-and-drive. [Aside: Given the number of DUI incidents involving NFL players, any reference to the negative aspects of drinking and driving might be considered “football focused”. Hmmm…]

Before you jump to the conclusion that the NFL is racing to get away from its stodginess, let me assure you that there are still products that will not be part of the ad mix on NFL games. You can agree with it or not, but the NFL is not going to air commercials for condoms or sexual lubricants during its games. Nor will you see ads for birth control drugs even though you will see plenty of ads for drugs that purport to combat erectile dysfunction. I guess the NFL would try to argue that they would prefer to stay away from the “debates” that could arise from such advertising. Whatever …

More interestingly, the NFL still will not allow energy drinks to be advertised nor can the makers or distributors of “supplements” purchase ad time. I was surprised to see energy drinks on the “do not sell ad time to these guys list”; but given the problems that some players have had with drug tests that they blame on supplements, I can understand the league not wanting to muddy those waters any more than they are.

However, here is the case that I find particularly interesting. The NFL will still prohibit any advertising by a gambling concern or for Las Vegas tourism. The NFL is putting a team in Las Vegas; they are the beneficiaries of $750M in State of Nevada tax revenue to build a new stadium there. The Las Vegas economy is not driven by heavy industry; Las Vegas lives and dies via tourism. I can understand that it might take a while for the NFL to get itself to the point where it does not look upon places like The Mirage or Bellagio or The Westgate as facilities populated in the main by evil ne’er-do-wells, but I do not understand how it can simultaneously believe that it is OK to place a team in Las Vegas but not allow the city to advertise itself as a tourist destination.

Finally, consider this comment from Brad Dickson in the Omaha World-Herald. I did not know this was part of the existing NFL/NFLPA Collective Bargaining Agreement:

“Ex-Husker Randy Gregory reportedly failed a drug test for the seventh time in the NFL. One more and he’s removed from the league permanently and becomes a member of the Grateful Dead.”

Let me begin with a Public Service Announcement today. You still have time to get your tickets to Des Moines, IA and hustle on out there for the World Pork Expo. Preliminary events began yesterday but things will be hopping all week long. Tomorrow, you can play a round of golf in the World Pork Open; you can pick up clothing accessories at the World Pork Apparel Shop; you can attend a seminar on Social Media in Pork Production. You can begin Thursday morning with an “Inspirational Service” and then participate in the World Pork Open Clay Target Championship. Friday will feature the judging of the Junior National Swine Show while Saturday is the piece de resistance – the sale of the livestock from the World Pork Open Swine Show. A good time will be had by all …

Back to sports… Albert Pujols joined the rather exclusive club of MLB players who have hit 600 home runs in a career. I have no interest in debating the cheapening of home run records in MLB over the past 25 years; the fact remains that very few players have ever done it and it may be a while until we see the next player join the club. Looking at active players who might get to this level, I see only one player over 30 years old who may have a shot and that is:

Miguel Cabrera: He is 34 years old and has been in MLB for 15 seasons. He has 451 home runs as of this morning; that is an average of 30 per season. If he can play until he is 40 and can average 25 home runs per season until then, he will join the club. Only twice in his career has he hit fewer than 25 home runs in a season. The first time was his rookie year when he only played in 87 games; the other time was in 2015 when he played in only 119 games. Barring injury, I think he is going to make it.

After Cabrera, I think you have to look all the way down the list of active players to the “young stars” to find someone who might get to the 600 level in home runs.

Nolan Arenado: He is 25 years old; he has 125 HRs in his first 5.4 seasons.

Bryce Harper: He is 24 years old; he has 136 HRs in his first 5.4 seasons.

Manny Machado: He is 24 years old; he has 117 HRs in his first 5.4 seasons.

Mike Trout: He is 25 years old; he has 184 HRs in his first 6.4 seasons.

June is not a month when one should expect an important news item from the world of college basketball. Nonetheless, just such an item emerged yesterday when Ohio state fired head coach Thad Matta. This parting of the ways was not sugar-coated; Matta is not leaving his job to spend more time with his family nor is he leaving to pursue some lifelong passion of his that had never been expressed to any human before yesterday. Ohio State simply fired him and doing that in early June is strange because the coaching carousel for college basketball coaches had pretty much gone to mothballs about a month ago.

Ohio State has had two consecutive difficult seasons; they have not made the NCAA Tournament – or any of the post-season basketball tournaments – in both of those years. While that may sound like a reason for a big-time athletic program to fire a coach, consider Matta’s coaching career for a moment:

He has been a head coach for 17 seasons (13 of them at Ohio State). He has missed post-season play only 3 times.

Overall, he has a winning percentage of .740.

At Ohio State in 13 seasons, he has a winning percentage of .733.

He has taken Ohio state to the Final Four twice.

Ohio State is a sufficiently attractive job to get the coaching carousel out of mothballs and fired up once again. It is not likely that Ohio State will hand the job to some high school coach who did a bang-up job somewhere; remember when Notre Dame tried that once in their football program and how swell that worked out. Ohio State is going to get a good coach and if that person is already employed somewhere else, that will start the domino effect.

The Buckeyes could hire Tom Crean for the job. He is capable and he is “unencumbered” at the moment having been let go by Indiana earlier this year. He knows the Big 10 and can likely be successful rather quickly. The problem with hiring Crean is that there will be no domino effect and that is not interesting. So, let me allow my mind to wander and present some other college coaches who might “get a call” from Ohio State so that if they take the job, there will be openings elsewhere.

Greg Marshall – Wichita State. He has been a constant presence in the NCAA Tournament in recent years and he always brings a competent and competitive team there.

Chris Mack – Xavier. Like Marshall, his teams are always in the tournament plus he is already a key player in basketball recruiting in the State of Ohio.

Shaka Smart – Texas. Smart is an excellent coach who made a mistake going to Texas where basketball is the poor relative. If he gets the call, he should take the job in a heartbeat.

Let me throw out one more name here that would probably not start up the college coaching carousel – but might get things moving in the NBA. Billy Donovan was highly successful in college and has had a nice run in Oklahoma City. Looking objectively at the Thunder, it is hard for me to see them doing much more than edging into the playoffs occasionally over the next several years in the NBA West. So … maybe a return to the college game at one of the premier programs would be enticing? Just saying …

Finally, here is a comment from Brad Dickson in the Omaha World-Herald:

“A Boston Marathon competitor reportedly took the train to get a better time. I’m going out on a limb and guessing that the meet director didn’t have to consult the rule book on this one.”

Jimmy Piersall died over the weekend. To say he was a “colorful character” would be a monumental understatement. Back in the 60s, he hit his 100th career home run in a game and ran backpedaling around the bases. I guess the “unwritten rules of baseball” had not been unwritten back then because no brawl ensued and he was not the target of a beanball in his next at bat. If that were to happen today, they would need to call out the National Guard.

Rest in peace, Jimmy Piersall.

By the way, Brad Dickson of the Omaha World-Herald had this comment recently regarding a baseball brawl:

“There was a Giants-Nationals brawl after Hunter Strickland threw at Bryce Harper. How silly does this make NHL players feel? The playoffs are winding down and the biggest sports brawl is started by guys named ‘Hunter’ and ‘Bryce.’”

For reasons that have never been crystal clear to me, ESPN televises the National Spelling Bee. I know the “E” in ESPN stands for “Entertainment” but I hardly find the Spelling Bee entertaining. I know the “S” stands for “Sports”; and while there is a clear and definite winner at the end of the spelling bee, I doubt that a significant number of people would call it a sport. Dwight Perry of the Seattle Times found a way to link the National Spelling Bee with a minor kerfuffle going on related to the current political situation:

Ananya Vinay, a sixth-grader from Fresno, Calif., won the 90th Scripps National Spelling Bee by correctly spelling:

“marocain”

“Krzyzewski”

“covfefe”

For the record, I can spell “Krzyzewski” but neither of the other two words on that list…

Obviously, I do not think cheerleading is a sport. It can be a very athletic endeavor/performance, but I don’t think it is a sport any more than I think rhythmic gymnastics is a sport. According to reports/rumors, the IOC may consider cheerleading as a sport and may think about including it in the Olympic Games in the future. Oh my …

I know that cheerleading has a tradition here in the US but I do not recognize it as a routine happenstance in many international sports. For example, I do not recall ever seeing cheerleaders for English Premier League games or for UEFA Cup games or for FIBA basketball games or for Australian Rules Football games or for Rugby games or for … I have seen cheerleaders for CFL games and I recall feeling very sorry for the young ladies given the weather conditions of the game I was watching. As I recall, it was in Winnipeg and it was really cold and there were gale force winds …

My point is that cheerleading does not seem to have much of a “world-wide footprint”. Are there cheerleaders in Kazakhstan? How about in Mali or in Iran? And please do not get me started on how cheerleading fits into the Olympics’ motto of “Faster … Higher … Stronger” which derives from events related to warfighting skills from times past.

Once again, let me borrow an observation from Dwight Perry of the Seattle Times related to cheerleading in the Olympics:

“Cheerleading could become an Olympic sport by 2024?

“All for drug tests, stand up and holler!”

According to reports coming out of Minneapolis, the FBI is investigating the University of Minnesota Ticket Office regarding allegations of fraud. Brent Holck, who was the head of the Ticket Office has been fired, and now the FBI is involved in a case that may have been ongoing for a while now. According to the Athletic Director at Minnesota:

“It was a very sophisticated and complex scheme and it was deliberately done … In essence, we had tickets that were distributed for Gopher events. We had tickets that were used but the revenue was not tying back to those tickets.”

He also said that the scheme was brought to light by an internal audit of “Gopher sports tickets”. In addition, the school now believes that this “scheme” had been ongoing for at least 6 years but when pressed to say how many tickets were involved or how much money had been diverted to improper destinations, the school could not provide specifics. Perhaps that is because the FBI is involved and the investigation is ongoing. However, the wording here is a bit strange…

The only way I can think of that would justify saying this has been going on for “at least 6 years” is this pair of situations:

The internal audit found a recent problem and subsequently traced that problem back 6 years in the past. Now if that is the case, the school would know the problem is that old.

To say the problem is “at least 6 years old” means there is a likelihood that it is even older. So, does that mean there are insufficient records starting 7 years ago to detect the problem or does that mean something different was ongoing starting 7 years ago?

Or – more ominously – does this mean that the accounting system used by the university is not adequate to dredge up fine scale details of transactions more than 6 years old?

For the record, the alleged sole perpetrator here is the now-fired Brent Holck. He was hired to the job in 2008 and had occupied that job until his firing a couple of months ago in 2017. Perhaps that is the basis for thinking the ticket fraud has been ongoing for more than 6 years.

By the way, none of the reporting I have read indicates why the FBI is involved in this investigation as opposed to the local or state police and district attorneys. There is more to come from this before all is understood…

Finally, let me return to Dwight Perry for a third time today for another item related to cheerleading:

“A high-school cheerleader in El Paso was arrested on suspicion of submitting a false police report after she confessed she made up a story that her home had been burglarized so she could keep her uniform instead of having to turn it in.

“She was released from jail after posting bond of two bits, four bits, six bits, $5,000.”

In the spirit of “keeping it real”, that opening game of the NBA Finals was not exactly what I had been looking forward to since November of last year. Both teams got to this series on cruise control and this was – in my mind’s eye – going to be a showdown between two teams that clearly stand above the rest of the league and two teams that can legitimately be labeled “juggernaut”. Game One was a blowout and it was clear from early in the 3rd quarter who was going to be the winner. Here is what I would like to see in this series:

I would like a game to be tied with 2 minutes left to play. Then I want either team to win the game – I really do not care which one – without the benefit of some outlandish call by an official.

I am only asking for one game like that. After enduring the tedium of this NBA regular season and its playoffs, I don’t think that is so much to ask for.

Down at the college basketball level, do you recall the “Louisville scandal” where a woman wrote a book and said that she had provided escorts and sexual services for Louisville recruits at the behest of the team? That was blaring headline news for a while back then but I did not see the same coverage of a news item regarding this matter about a week ago:

It seems as if the prosecutor and a grand jury in Kentucky have chosen not to file any charges against anyone in this matter.

Let’s review for a moment. We had allegations that someone paid someone else for sexual favors; if you could prove that, there would be a crime. You had allegations that one of the women who did some of the providing here was the underage daughter of the book’s author. If you could prove that, there would be a crime. Prosecutors and grand juries exist to:

Determine if there is evidence that a crime was committed

Bring charges against the individual(s) who committed that crime

Try, convict and punish said individual(s).

In this matter, the authorities stopped at Step 1 above. Moreover, it is not clear if the “stoppage” was caused by the lack of evidence that there was a crime committed or by the insufficiency of evidence against any individuals here.

The book that initiated this scandal was written and released in 2015. The Louisville program – and Rick Pitino personally – have been under this cloud for almost 2 years now. One might think that these decisions by the authorities in Kentucky would put an end to this and someone somewhere might say something like, “Ooops, sorry about that. I guess we rushed to judgment here.” Well, don’t hold your breath because now the NCAA will do its thing and decide if there are NCAA punishments that can be meted out in this matter. Given the NCAA’s pace of investigation – as evidenced by their progress in the UNC academic fraud matter – the Louisville basketball program will still be under this cloud for several years.

Stop the presses, I think Kevin Durant just threw down another dunk against the Cavs…

After a flurry if firings at ESPN, there was a recent announcement of a hiring. Chip Kelly will join the ESPN studio talkers this season and will contribute his comments to coverage of both college and NFL football. I do not know Chip Kelly but I do know a couple of folks who do and both say that Kelly is intelligent and articulate – – in addition to stubborn. If he is intelligent and articulate, he will fit in with the other chatterboxes on the ESPN studio sets. However, I think there is a more interesting aspect to this hiring than the person himself.

Recall that Urban Meyer spent time at ESPN commenting on college football after he left Florida and before he went to Ohio State. Might this “ESPN gig” be a short-term deal for Kelly as it was for Urban Meyer? Once the college football jobs start opening up, Kelly could well be the guy who takes one of the seats before the music stops. In fact, he might move up the date when the coaching carousel starts to go around if a school really wants him to take over its program.

Here is the proposition:

OVER/UNDER on the date for the first “Chip Kelly to Whatsamatta U rumor” is Halloween.

Your call…

Whoa! I think Steph Curry just sank another 3-ball against the Cavs…

Since I just mentioned ESPN – sort of – I want to make another observation. I tuned into a weekend MLB game on ESPN after the game was underway. That means I did not see the opening statements and so I was confused by what I saw. The announcing crew was sitting in the outfield stands. Dan Shulman, Aaron Boone and Jessica Mendoza were all out there and had baseball gloves presumably in the event that a ball landed in their laps.

Question for the ESPN Mavens: Who thought that was a good idea?

For decades upon decades, the best seats in the house have been set aside for the media – print and electronic. Seats in the outfield stands are not bad seats but they are not nearly as good as the standard ones provided. Compared to outfield seats, the broadcast team would get a better view of most of the game by simply watching the TV feed that all of us are getting. If that is “acceptable” television, why waste the time and money to send the broadcast team to the stadium in the first place? They could do that from a studio in East Jepeep, KS.

Finally, since I mentioned the Louisville scandal above and the potential for NCAA action there, consider this comment from Brad Rock in the Deseret News:

“Southeast Missouri State’s basketball team has been banned from postseason play next year for not meeting NCAA academic requirements.

“Since the Redhawks have made exactly one Division I NCAA Tournament appearance, isn’t that like banning Nancy Pelosi from Trump’s after-party?”

Finally, the NBA Finals will begin tonight. Almost everyone foresaw this matchup as the crescendo to the 2016/17 NBA season back in early October 2016; now we have what we knew we were going to get. It took 1230 regular season games and a series of playoff rounds that were less exciting than a turtle race to get here; but at least, we are here. One of the things about these NBA Finals that I find interesting is that the casinos in Las Vegas have been allowed to expand their betting options.

According to this report in the Las Vegas Review-Journal from about a week ago, the sportsbooks can now take on bets on things like the MVP of the NBA Finals and on the still-to-be-had NBA Draft. The financial mavens in the NBA should be quietly elated about this expansion because those financial mavens recognize the following identity:

More betting = More interest = More attention = More revenue

I looked at the early odds for the field of Finals’ MVP and found a humongous sucker bet in there. There are 19 players on the Cavs and Warriors who are named as potential winners of the MVP; seriously, even though almost no one can name 19 players on these two squads, there are odds listed for that many MVP candidates. However, none of them are nearly as bad as the sucker bet that I see:

At odds of 500-1, you can bet “The Field”.

That means you get anyone other than the 19 players who are named as potential recipients of the MVP Award.

Let me try to put that bet into perspective by saying that you can find 2 players on the Warriors who are at even higher odds than “The Field”. JaVale McGee and Zaza Pachulia are both on the board at 1000-1. And it is that silliness that points out just how big a sucker bet “the Field” would be. Looking at the active rosters from the two teams and who is not on the “19-man list of people with odds posted”, here is some of what you get for your bet on “The Field”:

Kay Felder played 9.2 minutes per game for the Cavs and has been hurt since April 10.

Dahantay Jones played in 1 game for the Cavs earlier this year.

Edy Tavares also played in 1 game for the Cavs earlier this year.

Ian Clark played 14 minutes per game this year for the Warriors mostly in blowout situations that he did not help to create.

Damian Jones played 85 minutes in 10 games for the Warriors all season long.

James Michael McAdoo averaged 8.8 minutes per game for the Warriors.

If I am going to wager that one of those guys will be the Finals’ MVP, I am going to need a lot more than 500-1 odds. Maybe something like 50,000-1 …

Speaking generically about sports wagering, a report on ESPN.com says that the US Congress may be on a path to make legalized sports gambling more widespread in the US. The Congress passed PASPA in 1992 and it was a piece of well-intentioned but ill-conceived bits of legislation. To get past it, Congress needs either to repeal PASPA and replace it – – not a good optic in DC these days – – or to circumvent most of its restrictive covenants. At the moment, there has been introduced and sent to committee a bill known as the Gaming Accountability and Modernization Enhancement Act (GAME Act) and it would specifically repeal the section of PASPA that limits sports betting to those states that had it prior to a specific date or those that passed new state legislation to enact it by a certain date.

This GAME Act also provides a definition of wagering/gambling that might clarify what Fantasy Sports might be. It says that a wager is:

“… the risking of something of value including virtual currency or virtual items, upon the outcome of a contest of others, a sporting event or a game of skill or a game of chance, on the expectation that the person will receive something of value in the event of a certain outcome.”

Please note that this definition would place things like state sponsored lotteries and fantasy sports in the same category as “sports betting”. Supporters of the GAME Act point out – completely rightfully – that there is lots of sports gambling going on in states where it is illegal under both Federal and State law. Supporters say it is time to recognize that reality and to do something about it and the something to do about it would be to legalize it, regulate it and – – tax it.

I have not read the GAME Act itself as it was introduced so I do not know if it has some stupid provision buried in it. However, given what I have heard about it, I think it is a GREAT leap forward from PASPA.

And, by the way, there is another aspect of “law enforcement” that the GAME Act needs to clarify by definition. Part of the “Federal crackdown” on gambling involves the use of a law from the 1960s and the application of that law to the Internet. That fact alone – to my mind – disqualifies the law from having any relevance or jurisdiction to the matter.

The major sports leagues – many of whom have financial stakes in Fantasy Sports websites – have been eerily silent on this news. My guess is that they want to see which way the wind is blowing before sticking their heads out of the foxholes…

Finally, Dwight Perry of the Seattle Times had a fantasy moment of his own and it was not completely wonderful:

“Heard the reports that MLB umpires will soon be miked up to explain replay decisions?

“Just woke up in a cold sweat: Dreamt the Yankees were playing the Red Sox, and Ed Hochuli was the crew chief.”